In this video tutorial I will tackle Regular Expressions. People think Regular Expressions are too hard to use. And, while I have received many thank you’s for creating my last Regex Tutorial. Here I’m going to finish up where I left off.

Before you proceed you should most definitely take a look at those Web Design and Programming tutorials that came previous to this one. This tutorial starts with this article Web Design and Programming.

Like always, the code from the tutorial follows the video and you can do whatever you like with it.

# {n,m} – Whatever proceeds must occur between n and m times
# {n,} – Whatever proceeds must occur at least n times
# ^ – Stands for start of string
# $ – End of string
# + – Whatever proceeds must occur one or more times

Thank you very much for the kind message 🙂 I have such a great community! I promise to redo the PHP tutorials. I really need to cover PHP frameworks like ZEND next time, which will solve so many problems for you.

I also have a bunch of regular expression tutorials aside from this one. Because regular expressions are the same for every language you can use the information in all of them. I also review regex again later in this series.